The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 29, 1944, Page 6

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PAGE SIX ’ THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE— EAU, ALASKA to inquire into un-American ac- CONCILIATION - FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1944 72 percent of cases assigned to them, | | ' STOWAWAY FROM |ALASKA COASTAL 32 SHIPS SUNK UNIONTREASURIES i wich came e o | Marsh pinted out. Only 7 labor ¥ § ! | Williams of Chicago was testify- disputes went to the War Labor i had been removed | JUNEAU IS HELD | AIRLINES MAKES BY BRIT. SUBS | ASSERTEDLY USED, | penue pepod peen somevea) SERVICE GIVES [mosr. o s s ane o our, ana NE Oilad PrEL DR Hae Waker] the Conciliation Service settled more 1 = than se | BY SEATTLE FBI TRIPS THURSDAY IN FAR EAST POLITICAL AIMS %t itchuracass s MANY DECISIONS i e s oo™ | i | Ml T }};‘: C::": Pf}:le“m(l}o?nc:r:?xzi:n:om:;:’ August disputes, by States: Alaska | Is Held Alaska Coastal Airlines made | LONDON, Sept., 20—British sub-| WASHINGTON, Sept. 20—t isi b SO 0 oo he union | SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 20.—The f;dAr;zrtx_n;A, %al;f'ox;x;(nhls ;\:;lo- | { Former NGVY Man Is Held ... trips yesterday, carrying the {marines sunk 32 enemy vessels intne Dies Committee Investigators'iwhen international officers sought Concillation Service of the U. S.| 100 ¥3i CAWAS & auo i Pon- Under B d of $500 following passengers to Ketchikan [Far Bastern waters recently and |contention that the CIO local union | o aececs the local §1.500 for @ po- | Department of Labor settled 236 | Su8 0% HEWAR 1 wasmn;(mc]om: naer bond ot = |on the first flight: J. R® Kinney, fe }nnmug([\a four others fiy torpedoes | reasuries are being used for Po- | iticer education program. He cb- |labor disputes in the 11 Western | Wymming . ; £ Makin Illegal Tl’lp Hardin Davis, Henry Fielder, John Over 600 Japs Are Report- or gunfire, the Admiralty announc-jtical purposes “without its mem-|jesteq and was removed. States, Alaska and Hawali during| During the fiscal year, ended last g g ar, Fred Zehring. On the sec- ed. bers having anything to say about —_————— August, it is annouced by E. P.|July 1, the Conciliation Service set- trip, J. w. Flewher and| ad Killad in Old Baffle- | The Jesels sunk ranged fromit," prought out the suggestion by MORRISON IN TOWN Marsh, regional director of the serv- |tled 3,433 disputes in the Western ordi to article in - & Charles Bunnell flew to the First small um._ml craft to medium sized |Rep. J. Parnell Thomas of New ic istales which involved 12383735 em- aper, William Albert | f'e|d Of HO”andlfi supply ships. |Jersey that the matter should be| Frank Morrison, of Washington, ing the month requests for | ployees, Marsh said. former Juneau kan {0 During the operations, the Brit- yeferred to the Attorney General.|D. C. has returned to Juneau from |mediation of disputes totaled 325, ——ee ide rged Navy man, | Dool Golden Sl S ish {‘fl“‘m l_mm‘(m“‘d ?uf‘dfl Strait | Robert Stripling made the asser- a trip to the westward and is now ! which means commissioners were | About half the boundary of New wing away |G. Burdick, L. E ANGC . between Java and Sumatra, and at- |jon that a subcommittee be named ' staying at the Baranof Hotel. able to scttle entirely by mediation, York State is water. o steamer Ketchikan to Wr L. B. QUARTERS, NEW GUINEA, Sept.|tacked shipping lanes along the Bkt et i K RHRE 4 e e E BTV 7 R 25 e It is alleged that Raudenbaugh |Chrisholm 29—In continuing heavy blows at|coasts of both islands, and even| R Lo e o B AR T S S ; on a ship at Juneau Petersburg to Juneau Stephen Japanese shipping south of the|yentured near Port Owen on the 1 S |0, Canier) W Bk |approaches to the Philippines, Al-|Southern Burma coast, where two| | | i when discovered on the voyage, |C Casler, W. F. Richwein | 1 ed overboard in & suicide at-| Junesu to Sitka—Burton Shultis, |lied fliers hav sunk four freight-|gunboats were sunk while they| | ; t. He was rescued and placed |Lester Boyd, W. G. Peck, C. F.| |ers at Halmahera, and Borneo|were lying at anchor. elEs T e e e . | headquarters announced a 3000~ —ro—— in custody and turned over to the |Fitzsimmons £43 P FBI when the boat docked in| Sitka to Juneau—Donald A. Cook, o1 ““L“‘l“ “A(* *““5 O: i;“e" FAIHER IHRows 5 / T ~ o 1 Tr o o Vy here Gen ouglas ac- Seattle. Brought before U. S. Com- Marvin Troutman, Ed Littlefield, | ! # d cflfl REA‘ W”G niss Harry M. Westfall he!Harris kinson, Jr., Donald Vmu_"‘”“‘lns planes have been raiding | wak plscell under & #y00, Dol g () | Three small freighters were sunk Raudenbaugh enlisted in the U |off the Halmahera area, in which | Navy at Kodiak in 1942 and was | I_ABOR l_EADERS MacArthur’s forces now stand with-| COSHOCTON, Ohio, Sept. 29.— discharged after seeing battle ac- in 300 miles of the Southern Philip- | Warren Patterson, 31 - year-old | 2 tion. He was reported as suffering | TE”. ROOSEVEIJ | pines, machinist, whom Prosecutor Russel | & from a war-bred psychoneurosis |" The communique listed a 65-ton|Lyons said admitted in a signed | For a while he worked on an Army bombing of the Japanese held|statement that he stood on a bridge boat at Skagway, but disappeared WAGES lI'OO low Ceram airdromes. A 1000-ton enemy |and dropped two of his four sons, from the boat and was last seen freighter was damaged off the|into (l?cbn‘\'erhbeca_use_ 20 had no| in town ¢ | Begdoate s ey . |Dutch Celebes and headquarters | home, is being held in jail. | The article did not say whether | 'vm‘l“ i :"‘f‘ l‘“ zf" i | lso said 686 more Japanese have| LArry, one and one-half yearsold,| | the boat Raudenbaugh stowed away | 9€7 n D. Roosevelt’s Labor|, =~ ""\iied in jungle warfare|drowned, and Raymond, seven, on was an ‘Ariny vessel or.not but| Advisory Oommittes, composee oflyon o iarsiiandta, May « were: mob| oamied . 0ub (of ‘thelispaifiana it is belleved that it might have|AFL and CIO leaders recOi-j ., .4 or by inland patrols aided |Wandered most of the night. The B Rl Had” itri. | mended & him ABRE Mo BINGIR S SRS S e | two others were left under a tree a |. ot ey 5 ‘Steel Wage Formula be scrapped, Y AUV BUIATE half mile away. Patterson said he cient identification from his last DA T { 4 | 2 4 but said they got no impression and his wife had separated and he| | job in Skagway to enable him 10, iy now he feels about the became frantic [ s "o e s 3t e 70,70 % BRIGADIER TAYLOR SR R g by AFL President William Green { i \i»\mfi l\"'l")W\ |and CIO President Philip Murray. IS EXPE(IED HERE WOODlEY (ARR'ES 8 : prEaaaee o G s | Both leaders said after the meet- Io WESIWARD 'I'ow"S Ray Martin, of Kodiak, is “‘i““" they told Roosevelt the for-! Brigadier Chester O. Taylor, of town and a guest at the Baranof. |mula outmoded and should be'the Salvation Army, is expected to| RSOV ST TR | revised upward. The formula limits return from the westward (luz'lng‘f Eight passengers are scheduled to| YOLSON IN JU ] | wartime wage increases,to 15 per the weekend and if he does he will | leave Juneau for points to the West- | DOLSON IN JUNEAU | POy o o ‘cent above January, 1941 levels. |conduct the Sunday services at the|Ward aboard a Woodley Airways Francis Dolson is in Juneau and | Sea b e barracks on Willoughby Avenue. ;Fgal;e t;;sla:ftcr‘lllgt’l;ab;l;ho‘sailsg:fi AMERICA" § II]xl:ant[l:::Lo:! D‘l“c Gastinean | ]P;:letlow}:nn% has a popuation of E co m[ o 1ts1 | Rabmo_Olegerisimo, Apolain Ton- on~oisseUrs of fine whiskey know Calvert tell us: “Before the war, during the I”JV“}”{‘II’)\“”I‘H | A oo Fmeire Wentods st TV | tance, Becimds Navarrol and iOlaf 4 Calvert is“the real thing, shortage, and now—Calvert was, and is, the DS R B ane T 1 Martin. ) 5 . whiskey most often asked for by name.” Yakutat — Willard Parkhurst, One taste tells that this superb blend is i # 2 Hrak, Lickee: at the peak of pre-war excellence...a whis- Happily. a greater supply of this super- Incoming passengers on the plane 1 ' be imi 1. That's why lati ],' labl 1 this afterncon were Jim Huston key that can’t be imitated. That's why, no lative whiskey is available today. So if you F. A. Rutledge, Jim Boyle, Albert matter how many other whiskies may come keep on asking for Calvert, the chances are Burgeois and W. Jacobsen from along, the preference for Calvert doesn’t youll now get this gloviously smooth and Anchorage, and Mr. Skarstion and| 1 % i il hange. In fact, people who sell and serve mellow blend. Eric Bulmer from Cordova . | b i i s Bismeligy gl o) | K SUPER MARKET DAHLIA GARDEN IS ooy, more Than ever. -y o s A | FUAR, | 7Y CLEAR HEADS CHOOSE CALVERT | 4 | | Orders for Delivery Acepted Up to 2:30 P. M. | Mrs. David Davis, on Twelfth . . } : Street, is on the warpath today!and | .C. BLENDED WHISKEY 86.8 Proof. Calvert*lteserve”—657 Grain Neutr « Phone, Write or Wire Us Your Order e e e b || o o . | Mrs. Davis has been rmsmg S ok S WS Sofady i RS i {dahlias of various varieties and has been proud of her flowers. ‘ ‘ ’ ’ She went to a movie last night' and upon returning home found L = - « ner dahlia bed ruined, stalks bent o . lor broken off, tlowers scattered and many of the larger ones car- i 5 |ried away. Neighbors reported this | morning that an intruder was seen |in the yard during the darkness of the early night and gave their | desu iption. L e Special! End-of-Month FOR NEW YORK CITY. ~=5 (learance on Dresses ENDS TOMORROW ledren's Service of the Territorial Department of Health, left today by | plane for New York City to attend Regular $24.00 Values {the annnual conference of the Am- lerican Public Health Association, to ‘“Jones-Stevens”’ Yes, We Have Many Kinds Such as A Giant Four-Foot Wheel of SWISS CHEESE at 85¢ a pound Get Yours Today!! ALSO-"ROQUEFORT" Cheese, $1.00 pound “LEIDERKRANTZ" in small foil pkgs. 45¢ "KAUKAUNA CLUB" in stone jars, 65¢ "VERA-SHARP" in glasses, 35¢ each “LONG HORN", a sharp tasty cheese, 60c 1b. “PROVOLENE" imporied cheese, 95¢c 1h. "“GUETOST" goat cheese, 75¢c and 50c “CHATEAU", very lasty, 35¢c pky. “AMERICAN" full cream, 60c 1b. i "“TILSIT" spread cheese, 49c jar also confer with Children’s Bureau officials in Washington, D. C., and other health officials in the States. TED CARTERBACK | FROM SURVEY TRIP Ted Carter, Assistant in FoodI Production, returned here last night‘ by plane from the westward, where he has beemr conducting a \urveyw for the past seven weeks in the Matanuska Valley, Kenai Peninsula and the Tanana region. Mr. Carter conferred with officials at the Mat- anuska Experiment Station and| also at the University of Alaska. TASS SAYS NAZI . GERMANY NOT TO BE PART!TIONED LONDON, Sept. 29—The official Russian news agency, Tass, denied the Tri-power European Advisory Commission in London is consider- {ing cutting up Germany into small States upon her unconditional sur- render. | In a Moscow broadcast the agency said “the problem has often been raised in the British and American press concerning the possibility of |the Germans’ dismemberment into |several small, independent States. Projects of this kind, however, are not considered by the European Ad- visory Commission.” Soviet Russia, the United States jand Britain compose the commis- | sion. “PORT WINE" Kaukauna Club in jars, 43¢ Grated Cheese-Roman Cheese-Edam’sand dozens of Other Kinds! See George Bros. FIRST and LAST for Cheese!! $5 GEORGE BROTHERS — e e—— Bread baking is one of the most |ancient of human arts,

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